The Future of Security in Space: a Thirty-Year US Strategy
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APRIL 2021 The Future of Security in Space: A Thirty-Year US Strategy Lead Authors: Clementine G. Starling, Mark J. Massa, Lt Col Christopher P. Mulder, and Julia T. Siegel With a Foreword by Co-Chairs General James E. Cartwright, USMC (ret.) and Secretary Deborah Lee James In Collaboration with: Raphael Piliero Christopher J. MacArthur Brett M. Williamson Alexander Powell Hays Dor W. Brown IV Christian Trotti Ross Lott Olivia Popp The Future of Security in Space: A Thirty-Year US Strategy Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security The Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security works to develop sustainable, nonpartisan strategies to address the most important security challenges facing the United States and the world. The Center honors General Brent Scowcroft’s legacy of service and embodies his ethos of nonpartisan commitment to the cause of security, support for US leadership in cooperation with allies and partners, and dedication to the mentorship of the next generation of leaders. Forward Defense Forward Defense helps the United States and its allies and partners contend with great-power competitors and maintain favorable balances of power. This new practice area in the Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security produces Forward-looking analyses of the trends, technologies, and concepts that will define the future of warfare, and the alliances needed for the 21st century. Through the futures we forecast, the scenarios we wargame, and the analyses we produce, Forward Defense develops actionable strategies and policies for deterrence and defense, while shaping US and allied operational concepts and the role of defense industry in addressing the most significant military challenges at the heart of great-power competition. This report is written and published in accordance with the Atlantic Council Policy on Intellectual Independence. The authors are solely responsible for its analysis and recommendations. The Atlantic Council and its donors do not determine, nor do they necessarily endorse or advocate for, any of this report’s conclusions. Disclaimer: Opinions, conclusions, and recommendations expressed or implied within are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the Air University, the United States Air Force, the Department of Defense, or any other US government agency. © 2021 The Atlantic Council of the United States. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the Atlantic Council, except in the case of brief quotations in news articles, critical articles, or reviews. Please direct inquiries to: Atlantic Council 1030 15th Street NW, 12th Floor Washington, DC 20005 For more information, please visit www.AtlanticCouncil.org. Cover credit: Helen Lundeberg, “The Veil,” 1947, The Macfarlane Collection, https://scalar.usc.edu/works/the-space-between-literature-and- culture-1914-1945/media/fig-12-helen-lundeberg-the-veil-1947-oil-on-board-8- -x-12-in-/-222-x-30-cm-the-macf. Courtesy the Feitelson/Lundeberg Art Foundation. ATLANTIC COUNCIL STRATEGY PAPERS EDITORIAL BOARD Executive Editors Mr. Frederick Kempe Dr. Alexander V. Mirtchev Editor-in-Chief Mr. Barry Pavel Managing Editor Dr. Matthew Kroenig Editorial Board Members Gen. James L. Jones Mr. Odeh Aburdene Amb. Paula Dobriansky Mr. Stephen J. Hadley Ms. Jane Holl Lute Ms. Ginny Mulberger Gen. Arnold Punaro Recommended citation: "Clementine G. Starling, Mark J. Massa, Christopher P. Mulder, and Julia T. Siegel, The Future of Security in Space: A Thirty-Year US Strategy, Atlantic Council, April 2021." THE FUTURE OF SECURITY IN SPACE: A THIRTY-YEAR US STRATEGY Contributor Biographies This strategy paper was produced by the lead co-authors in accordance with the Atlantic Council’s policy on intellectual independence. The strategy paper was overseen and guided by the co-chairs and supported by the collaborators listed, with thanks to those who shared their insights and provided peer review. STRATEGY PAPER CO-CHAIRS General James E. Cartwright, USMC (Ret.) Former Vice Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff; Board Director, Atlantic Council General James Cartwright, USMC (Ret.) hails from Rockford, Illinois. He attended the University of Iowa and was commissioned as a second lieu- tenant in the US Marines in 1971. He was both a naval flight officer and naval aviator who flew the F-4 Phantom, OA-4 Skyhawk, and F/A-18 Hornet. In 1983, he was named Outstanding Carrier Aviator of the Year by the Association of Naval Aviation and went on to command Marine Aviation Logistics Squadron 12, Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 232, Marine Aircraft Group 31, and 1st Marine Aircraft Wing. He also served in a wide range of Marine and joint billets, includ- ing assistant program manager for engineering, F/A-18 Naval Air Systems Command; deputy, aviation plans, policy, and budgets, Headquarters, US Marine Corps; and director, force structure, resources, and assessment, J-8, Joint Staff. General Cartwright graduated with distinction from the Air Command and Staff College, received a master’s in national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College, completed a fellowship with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and was honored with a Naval War College Distinguished Graduate Leadership Award. Unique among Marines, General Cartwright served as commander, US Strategic Command, before being nominated and appointed as the eighth vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the nation’s second-highest military officer. During his four-year tenure as vice chairman across two presidential administrations and constant mil- itary operations against diverse and evolving enemies, General Cartwright became widely recognized for his technical acumen, vision of future national security concepts, and keen ability to integrate systems, organizations, and people in ways that encourage creativity and spark innovation in the areas of strategic deterrence, nuclear proliferation, missile defense, cybersecurity, and adaptive acquisition processes. General Cartwright is also an adviser for several corporate entities involved in global management consulting; technology services and program solu- tions; predictive and big-data analytics; and advanced systems engineering, integration, and decision-support services. He serves as an adviser to Beyond 2 Aerospace, Enlightenment Capital, IxReveal, HSH Analytics, ForcePoint, and the Potomac Institute. In addition, he was a member of SpaceX National Security Space Strategic Advisory Committee, as well as a consultant for AT&T Government Solutions and Logos Technologies. General Cartwright is also affiliated with a number of professional organizations to include the Aspen Strategy Group, Council on Foreign Relations, Global Zero, and Nuclear Threat Initiative. Secretary Deborah Lee James Former Secretary, US Department of the Air Force; Board Director, Atlantic Council Deborah Lee James served as the twenty-third secretary of the Air Force and was responsible for the affairs of the Department of the Air Force, including the organizing, training, equipping, and providing for the welfare of its nearly 660,000 active-duty, National Guard, reserve, and civilian airmen and their families. She also oversaw the Air Force’s annual budget of more than $139 billion. Secretary James has thirty years of senior homeland and national secu- rity experience in the federal government and the private sector. Prior to her Air Force position, James served as president of Science Applications International Corporation’s Technical and Engineering Sector, where she was responsible for 8,700 employees and more than $2 billion in revenue. For nearly a decade, James held a variety of positions with SAIC, includ- ing senior vice president and director of homeland security. From 2000 to 2001, she was executive vice president and chief operating officer at Business Executives for National Security, and from 1998 to 2000 she was vice president of international operations and marketing at United Technologies. During the Bill Clinton administration, from 1993 to 1998, James served in the Pentagon as the assistant secretary of defense for reserve affairs. In that position, she was the Secretary of Defense’s senior advisor on all matters pertaining to the 1.8 million National Guard and Reserve personnel worldwide. In addition to working extensively with Congress, state governors, the business community, military associations, and international officials on National Guard and Reserve component issues, she oversaw a $10-billion budget and supervised a one-hundred- plus-person staff. Prior to her Senate confirmation in 1993, she served as an assistant to the assistant secretary of defense for legislative affairs. From 1983 to 1993, she worked as a professional staff member on the House Armed Services Committee, where she served as a senior advisor to the Military Personnel and Compensation Subcommittee, the NATO Burden Sharing Panel, and the Chairman’s Member Services team. Secretary James earned a bachelor of arts degree in comparative area studies from Duke University and a master’s degree in international affairs from Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs. 3 THE FUTURE OF SECURITY IN SPACE: A THIRTY-YEAR US STRATEGY Lead Authors Clementine G. Starling is the deputy director of Forward Defense and resident fellow of the Transatlantic Security Initiative at the Atlantic Council. In her role, she oversees the Initiative’s programming and